I <3 the Constitution, and was only friends with you so I could cheat off your tests.
Joel Send a noteboard - 13/06/2012 09:00:07 PM
Joel Send a noteboard - 13/06/2012 09:00:07 PM
Which reminds me: You still owe my folks for junior year summer school (I should have known the atomic weight of tungsten was not "carrot."
)
Strong friendships can survive strong, even fundamental, differences if one wants to or cannot resist engaging. If the differences are so great they may endanger the friendship, nonengagement may be the best course. The balance is often hard to find, and I claim no expertise.
The day of the Oslo massacre a good friend of mine in KS came on Skype to ask if I was OK, and agreed to pray for the missing and injured classmates of my father-in-laws stepdaughter. The next time I heard from him, about the time we heard the missing girl had been found dead and the injured one was undergoing a second life-saving surgery, was a FB post complaining the real crime was liberals victimizing conservatives over the massacre. Needless to say, we had words, over several weeks, then had none for several months. We ultimately resolved it and remain friends, but were reminded there are some topics on which our feelings are too strong to safely discuss.
The best advice I can give, from negative experience, is not personalizing issues. Once I started talking to dart_board outside wotmania political threads he seemed like a decent guy with whom I even share some basic values—we just strongly disagree on politics, and are not shy about voicing our opinions, sometimes hyperbolically. Knowing that facilitates keeping person and positions distinct.
The flip side is, sometimes people are more invested in issues than in relationships, usually ending the latter sooner or later. We must take people as they are, not as we wish them to be, but sometimes that means accepting, caring about and AVOIDING them. Likewise, a relationship is just that, and if one person disengages there is not much the other can do about it. Here is hoping you and your friend can patch things up and agree to disagree.
You still follow my news feeds from Alex Jones though, right?
)So, by now we've all been on facebook and other social media sites long enough to have spotted all the ... zealots(?). I have found some with psycho political beliefs (hid one, giggle at some others) and now an anti-abortion poster has popped up. What do you do when you come across these people? Does it matter how long you've know the individual? The fervor with which they post about their pet cause? The frequency? Any other thoughts?
I just went off on my best friend from high school. I'm actually quite sad about it (we were seriously close, like sisters), but I can't see that I could have done anything else.
I just went off on my best friend from high school. I'm actually quite sad about it (we were seriously close, like sisters), but I can't see that I could have done anything else.
Strong friendships can survive strong, even fundamental, differences if one wants to or cannot resist engaging. If the differences are so great they may endanger the friendship, nonengagement may be the best course. The balance is often hard to find, and I claim no expertise.
The day of the Oslo massacre a good friend of mine in KS came on Skype to ask if I was OK, and agreed to pray for the missing and injured classmates of my father-in-laws stepdaughter. The next time I heard from him, about the time we heard the missing girl had been found dead and the injured one was undergoing a second life-saving surgery, was a FB post complaining the real crime was liberals victimizing conservatives over the massacre. Needless to say, we had words, over several weeks, then had none for several months. We ultimately resolved it and remain friends, but were reminded there are some topics on which our feelings are too strong to safely discuss.
The best advice I can give, from negative experience, is not personalizing issues. Once I started talking to dart_board outside wotmania political threads he seemed like a decent guy with whom I even share some basic values—we just strongly disagree on politics, and are not shy about voicing our opinions, sometimes hyperbolically. Knowing that facilitates keeping person and positions distinct.
The flip side is, sometimes people are more invested in issues than in relationships, usually ending the latter sooner or later. We must take people as they are, not as we wish them to be, but sometimes that means accepting, caring about and AVOIDING them. Likewise, a relationship is just that, and if one person disengages there is not much the other can do about it. Here is hoping you and your friend can patch things up and agree to disagree.
You still follow my news feeds from Alex Jones though, right?
Honorbound and honored to be Bonded to Mahtaliel Sedai
Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.
Love still can't be coerced.
Please Don't Eat the Newbies!
LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.
Love still can't be coerced.
Please Don't Eat the Newbies!

LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
This message last edited by Joel on 14/06/2012 at 12:49:43 AM
Facebook eye-openers.(partially NSSP)
- 13/06/2012 05:10:53 AM
1188 Views
A cousin of my wife just posted a link to his new business
- 13/06/2012 12:00:19 PM
790 Views
You know it's easier with things like this to sit back and enjoy it
- 13/06/2012 02:39:35 PM
772 Views
The worst I got lately was football idiocy
- 13/06/2012 12:36:22 PM
883 Views
You complain about football comments, and then you post things like that?
- 13/06/2012 10:31:10 PM
657 Views
- 13/06/2012 10:31:10 PM
657 Views
Same here
- 14/06/2012 12:24:46 AM
701 Views
A lot of people used to think like that
- 14/06/2012 10:13:27 AM
662 Views
What were his stats again?
- 14/06/2012 08:38:40 PM
689 Views
Because he's your only offensive player who seems at all effective?
- 14/06/2012 09:38:49 PM
731 Views
Hasn't he got a reputation for being able to start a fight in an empty room though?
- 14/06/2012 10:09:08 PM
957 Views
Maybe you can clarify...
- 13/06/2012 02:01:58 PM
724 Views
Maybe I can.
- 13/06/2012 04:55:28 PM
838 Views
Facebook is about the casual insulting of opposed political, religious and social viewpoints.
- 13/06/2012 07:22:57 PM
712 Views
Re: Maybe I can.
- 13/06/2012 07:50:53 PM
732 Views
Hm.
- 13/06/2012 09:52:58 PM
741 Views
Hard to think of better examples, but yeah it's hardly an automatic
- 13/06/2012 11:20:25 PM
876 Views
This is actually the biggest reason I dislike Facebook (and other social media).
- 13/06/2012 03:49:45 PM
783 Views
We have two options, as I see it: 1) Wear big boy pants; 2) Hide lots of posts.
- 13/06/2012 04:02:07 PM
988 Views
I'm lucky that I pretty much never see anything on Facebook that really annoys me
- 13/06/2012 04:23:43 PM
693 Views
I've been thinking about that.
- 13/06/2012 05:02:17 PM
697 Views
Same. And re: the backlash: there'd almost have to be, wouldn't there?
- 13/06/2012 10:18:57 PM
783 Views
An AZ cop posted a FB pic of him with kids, a gun and a bullet riddled shirt with Obamas face on it.
- 13/06/2012 11:40:38 PM
829 Views
I <3 the Constitution, and was only friends with you so I could cheat off your tests.
- 13/06/2012 09:00:07 PM
726 Views
- 13/06/2012 09:00:07 PM
726 Views
Almost half of the comments I see on Facebook aren't even in English!
- 13/06/2012 11:13:00 PM
710 Views
- 13/06/2012 11:13:00 PM
710 Views
I find a lot of interesting news on Facebook
- 14/06/2012 01:37:59 PM
751 Views
Same on the replacing much of what I once received from this community.
- 14/06/2012 09:48:15 PM
622 Views

*NM*